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BUSINESS DEANS LIST HONORS 50
(See Column Three)
PAGE THREE
Row Weekend Parties Honor St. Patrick
Universrty cyf Southern Gali'-forrwa
DAI LY W TROJAN
PAGE FOUR
Diamond Men to Play Santa Barbara
V0L- Ll,l LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, FRIDAY, MARCH 16, 1962 NO. 90
Protest Storm Blackens Voting
FILING THROUGH-First day voters cast their votes in the controversial balloting yesterday which resulted in com-
TOMMY'S TAILOR-Roger N. Burnham, 85, who created
Tommy Trojan in 1929-30, died yesterday of natural causes. The noted sculptor also did numerous works for the city including a statue of General MacArthur.
Tommy s Dies at
Father'
85
Age
By SUE BERNARD Burnham on Russell S. Saun-
The father of Tommy Trojan ders, a star back on the USC died vesterday. football team that year.
Roger Noble Burnham, 85.! “Tommy Trojan” was com-the sculptor of the 32-year-old Pleted and dedicated in June, statue of the Trojan warrior, 1930, at a ceremony in which died of natural causes at the ’Dr. McCoy’s daughter Janet, as home of friends. He had been vice president of the student under the care of guardians body and official host of the
Mr. and Mrs. John Pfalzgraff, 1041 W. 21st St., for the past two years.
university, unveiled the Trojan statue. She is now Mrs. Mulvey White, wife of the university’s vice president of student and alumni affairs.
Funeral services have not yet been announced. Final arrangements will be made after the Saunders Posed arri\ al of Mr. Burnham s bro- Saunders, now an assistant ther, Stanton, from Florida at director for Warner Brothers noon today. J Pictures, recalled yesterday for
the Daily Trojan the posing he
Short Illness
Pfalzgraff told the Daily Trojan yesterday that Mr. Burnham had been living in the rear of a house across the street from him. The sculptor became ill Jan. 23 and moved in with the Pfalzgraffs a week later.
“There will probably be some kind of services at the little church Roger’s been attending, the New Jerusalem Church (Sweden-Borgian) at 6th and Virgil,’’ he said.
Mr. Burnham, born in Bingham. Mass., did the Tommy Trojan statue in 1929-30 on the request of the USC Alumni Association.
Trojan Symbol
did when the sculptor was creating Tommy.
“I was asked one day by Bill Hunter, then director of athletics, to meet the man who was going to do the Trojan warrior statue. I was very interested then in athletics and body building, and when I met Burnham he asked me if I’d like to pose for him,” he said.
“It was quite a pleasure for me and I thought he did a beautiful job.”
Three Sessions
Saunders posed for three ses sions of approximately an hour’s length, and the sculptor took numerous photographs and
Dr. Janies D. McCoy, then measurements to keep his image
president of the General Alumni Association, commissioned the bronze figure “to perpetuate the symbol ’Trojan’ in the form of a Trojan Warrior, set up on the campus and so located that it would constitute a rallying point for the student body.”
Dr. McCoy wrote that Mr. Burnham, one of America’s outstanding sculptors, “immediately caught the idealism back of our project and went to work upon the model.”
in mind.
Mr. Burnham, a Los Angeles resident for many years, contributed many other examples of sculpture in the area. He created the figure of General MacArthur that stands in MacArthur Park and the “War and Peace” Spanish-American war memorial for the U.S. Veterans Administration Hopsital in Sawteile.
He also did the Rudolph Valentino memorial, called “Inspiration,” which stood in De-The model was begun in Longpre Park until vandals spring of 1929, based by Mr. broke it off at the base.
Six Students Make 4-Point In Business
Fifty business students were cited on the fall semester Dean's List released yesterday by the School of Business.
To be eligible for the honor, students must carry a minimum of 12 units and must have received a 3.5 or better grade average.
Six students on the list earned a 4.0 average for the semester — Frank Albert Caput, management; Daniel M. Gottlieb, finance; Margaret Ann Folk, marketing; Stephan Bruce Imhoff, accounting; Nancy Zoe Spillman, business education; and Drn Craig Todt, finance.
Notable Increase
“There is a notable increase in the number of lower division students who made the list,"
Dr. William C. Himstreet, assistant business dean, noted.
“This is a step in the right direction for the honors program we are starting in the fall.”
Dr. Himstreet pointed to one student, Harold Valentiner in management, who made the list with a 3.62 while carrying 24 units.
Also included in the honor roll were Phyllis E. Balliett, in- j dustrial relations; Robert Hay-lett Bardin, finance; William M.
Barton, management; Robert Joel Berg, business economics and international trade; William H. Broesamle, management; Kenneth Walter Burgan, accounting; Jerome Hudson Craig, accounting; Dominic Ferrante, management; Barry Carlyle Fink, finance: Norman E. Fist, marketing; and Howard Grant Franklin, finance.
Others Named
Also named were Robert H.
Glogow, accounting; David L.
Gordin, marketing; Lynn Steven Guerra, management; David Alan Hartquist, management;
David A. Hodgkinson, accounting; Richard Karl Hoertig, management; Douglas F. Jenan, management; and Sherwood Kahlenberg, finance.
The list continued with Philip T ^ ,•
Kelmar, accounting; Louis Ar-j | Q V*OnTinUO lene Kirkstone, office administration; Robert William Lees, accounting; Elaine Levey, accounting; Barbara Ann Littlejohn, business education; Paul Thomas Locke, finance; Joseph Edmund Monaly, accounting; and Robert T. Northcote, finance.
Joseph O. Oltmans, finance;
Charles D. Ousley, marketing;
Rune S. Pearson, accounting;
Claudette Perier, business education; Rhoger H. Pugh, finance; Janet M. P^au, office administration; and Marilyn J.
Rossino, business education, were also named.
The list concluded with Harold Scott, management; Grant Kenyon Smith, accounting;
Maris Valkass, marketing;
Richard Edward Wagner, business economics and international trade; William Rogert Watson, finance; Donald Alan Weintraub, management; Waller Charles Wells, accounting; and Douglass J. Wold, food distribution.
Complaints Hit
Broken Rules'
As 1,100 Vote
By DAN SMITH Senate Reporter
A new elections controversy developed at the start of balloting yesterday as several enraged students and groups complained that not all of the more than 1,100 first-day voters were eligible to go through the polls.
Among the protestors were Julie Cummins, Senior Class secretary and one of the
Daily Trojan Photo
plaints by poll workers concerning the ineligibility of some of the 1,100 students who exercised their privileges.
Lope Drama Will Receive U.S. Premiere in Bovard
Lope de Vega’s rarely pro duced drama of love, intrigue and murder, “The Gentleman from Olmedo/' will open a six-run performance tonight at 8:30 in Bovard Auditorium in celebration of the 400th birthday of the renowned Spanish playwright.
The play, being presented by the drama department, will receive two performances tomorrow with a matinee scheduled for 2 p.m. and an evening performance at 8:30. Tickets for all performances, including March 22, 23 and 24, are on sale at the drama office, 3709
Hofstadter To Continu Discussions
Court Posts Will Open
Petitions for two clerks for Womens’ Judicial Court will be available next week in 301a SU,
Chief Justice Hedy Davis announced yesterday.
Applicants should have a 2.5 cumulative grade average and sophomore standing next fall, fall, she said. They should also sign up for an interview time when they pick up and fill out applications.
“Those chosen will proceed to justices and will stay on until graduation. They will sit in on all judicial meetings as voting members and will record and type up statements for official! accommodate
Historian Richard Hofstadter will discuss “Anti-Intellectual-ism in Our Time” tonight at 8 in 229 FH in the second of a five-part series being presented by the Haynes Foundation.
Dr. Hofstadter opened his series on “Anti-Intellectualism in American Life” in front of a capacity crowd Wednesday with a discussion of reasons for the unpopularity of the intellectual in many sectors of the American public.
Second Lecture
He will devote his second lecture to illustrations of the philosophy of the intellect which he discussed Wednesday. The historian will be introduced by Dr. Carl Q. Christol, professor and head of the political science department.
The Columbia University historian earned the Pulitzer Prize in history in 1955 for “The Age of Reform: From Bryan to F.D.R.”
His awards for scholarly writings have included the Beveridge Memorial Prize of the American Historical Association. which he received in 1944 for “Social D a r wi n i s m in American Thought.”
Remaining Lectures
Three remaining campus lectures in the current Haynes Foundation series will be given by Dr. Hofstadter next week. On Monday he will discuss “The Decline of the Gentleman,” while “The Fate of the Reformer” and ‘The Rise of the Expert” will be discussed next Wednesday and Friday respectively.
All lectures, open to the public, will be held in 229 FH at 8 p.m. Loudspeakers have been placed in an adjoining room to overflow from
Hoover St. Admission is S1.50 and students may purchase tickets for 50 cents with activity book coupon 26.
The production will be the first United States performance of the play in the new English translation by Dr. Everett W. Hesse, professor of Spanish, in collaboration with graduate students in a summer Lope seminar.
The flavor of 16th century will be in the music composed for “Gentleman” in 1961 by Harold Owen, teaching assistant in music. The score is based on Spanish ballads of the 15th and 16th centuries for harpsichord, recorder and cello, all popular instruments of the time.
The musicians will appear on stage in authentic Spanish costumes of the period.
Dr. Herbert M. Stahl, professor of drama, will direct the 17-member cast in the three-act performance. Dr. Stahl has staged 25 plays on the USC campus over the past few years. An elaborate set has been designed for the production by John E. Blankenchip, associate professor of drama.
Leading the cast are W. Von Hanwehr as Alonso, Lennard Richmond as Rodrigo, Richard Doetkott as Fernando and Arnold Tamon as Don Pedro.
“The flamboyancy of Lope de Vega’s life and times spills onto the stage in this work,” Bill White, resident stage manager, said. “The play chron-
icles the love of the bullfighter
Don Alonso for the beautiful Ines (portrayed by Allison
Price).”
Blending romance, comedy, and tragedy, the play dramatizes the plight of human beings controlled like puppets by the forces of honor and jealousy, White explained.
“One of the neglected geniuses of the theater, Lope de Vega was amazing in both his literary output and his private life,” White said. “His exploits inspired his contemporary Cervantes to label him a ‘prodigy of nature’.”
'Stagecoach' To Be Run
John Ford’s classic western “Stagecoach’* will be featured tonight at 8 by Delta Kappa Alpha, cinema fraternity, in 133 FH.
The 1939 movie, winner of two Academy Awards, stars John Wayne, Claire Travor and Thomas Mitchell and details the journey of the coach through Apache country. Admission is 50 cents.
Ballots will be available at the showing for the DKA-spon-sored Academy Award predictions contest, for which prizes will be awarded to the persons making the most correct predictions for this year's Academy Awards.
poll workers, and Mike Guhin, president of the Trojans for Representative G o v e r n m ent Party (TRG).
The Board of Inquiry did not meet yesterday to consider the new protests, nor a Daily Trojan protest against the fraudulent insertion of campaign flyers in Wednesday’s paper. No date has been set for a board meeting.
Illegal Voters
Guhin, speaking for TRG, said he knew of three students who had voted illegally yesterday and another who was eligible to vote but whose name did not appear on the master roll of voters. He also claimed students without ID were allowed to vote.
He pointed out that candidates had paid $300 for an accurate list of eligible voters and deplored the inaccuracy of the final list and the disregard being paid it by the Elections Committee.
Dwight Chapin, TRG party chairman, was the voter whose named did not appear on the list of voters, Guhin said.
Foreign Students
Miss Cummins said she noted that several foreign students not officially enrolled in the university had managed to convince the Election Committee they should be permitted to vote.
She explained in a letter to the Daily Trojan that they were “special students,” a description used for students who are not fully enrolled until they complete prerequisite requirements.
Elections Commissioner John Moyer refused to admit or deny that any students had illegally voted.
“In cases where we have been challenged on discrepan cies, we will fully investigate, he said in a 13-word statement.
Wrong Ballots
Other students claimed that poll workers had handed bal lots to them for fields-of-study offices for which they were not entitled to vote.
Moyer, when told that ballots were being distributed to the wrong voters, said he had warned his helpers to double check ballot distributions.
Many students were also seen taking notebooks and other material into the voting booths in violation of election procedures.
Moyer said he tried to correct the situation by having (Continued on Page 2)
Upton Sinclair to Lecture On Man in Uneasy World
files/’ Miss Davis said.
the lecture halL
Upton Sinclair, Pulitzer prize-winning protest writer and flamboyant politician, will speak to USC students next Friday at 11 in Hancock Auditorium.
Sinclair's lecture, “The Individual in a Troubled World,” will be sponsored by the Schocl of Library Science and has been made possible by Paul Baker, general manager of the Pacific library Bindery, Library Dean Martha Boaz said.
The 84-year-old Sinclair, who now lives a quiet life w ith little social activity other than his small group of friends, is the author of novels, plays, biographies and historical interpretations.
His present simple life is a contrast to his former spectacular political career in New
Jersey and California and his | been poor. When conventional
publishers boycotted his work, he issued it himself, nearly always at a financial loss.
There are 772 translations of Sinclair's books in 47 languages and 39 counrties. “World’s
literary crusades for social reform.
Born in Baltimore, he belonged to the unsuccessful branch of an old. wealthy and powerful family. He was a student at
the College of the City of New j End, his 61st novel, was a Lit York at 14 and he worked his erary Guild selection in 1940.
way through CCNY and Columbia University writing hack stories for pulp magazines and jokes for comic periodicals.
He wrote “The Jungle” in 1906 after an investigation of the Chicago stockyards and it was this best seller that made him rich. Sinclair lost all his money in a Utopian cooperative hall which burned down after a year.
Since then he has never been prosperous and has frequently
“Dragon's Teeth” received the Pulitzer prize in 1943.
He ran for various public offices on the Socialist ticket in New Jersey and California, but resigned from the party because of its stand against America’s participation in World War I. Later he returned to the party.
In 1934 he ran for governor of California on the Democratic ticket in a campaign notable for the bitterness of the attacks on him.
Famed Trio Will Present Free Concert
Six members of the faculty of the new Institute for Special Musical Studies — including the world-renowned trio of violinist Jascha Heifetz, cellist Gregor Piatigorsky and violist William Primrose — will perform in Hancock Auditorium next Saturday.
Also on the program of the informal chamber concert for students and faculty will be violinist Eudice Shapiro, violist Sanford Schonbach and pianist Muriel Kerr.
Two hundred free concert tickets wall be available on a first-come, first-served basis at the School of Music, Widney Hall, beginning at 12:15 on Monday, Music Dean Raymond Kendall reported.
No telephone reservations for seats will be accepted.
There will be 150 tickets for students at the information window in the music building. Each student must present an ID card. Due to demand, only one ticket will be given each student.
Fifty faculty tickets will be distributed from room 2 of the same building. Professors must also show their ID cards.
The concert will be sponsored jointly by the School of Music and the Committee on Cultural Events.
The famed music trio began instruction in the music studies institute this semester.
Admissions Receives New Head
Promotion of Howard W. Patmore to the post of director of admissions was announced yesterday by Mulvey White, vice president for student and alumni affairs.
Patmore, who has been with the university for 36 years, was made acting director of admissions a month and a half ago.
He served during the past two years as associate director of admissions, was registrar for 15 years, and assistant registrar 18 years prior to that.
As director of admissions, he will be in charge of handling applications for admission to USC from high school students, transfers from junior colleges and other colleges and universities and students entering graduate divisions.
He is also secretary of the curriculum committee, which approves all courses taught at USC, and secretary of the admissions and student scholarship committees.
A graduate of the University of North Dakota, the new’ director is a member of Phi Beta Kappa and Phi Kappa Phi, national scholarship fraternities. He also belongs to Blue Key, national college men’s honor society, Phi Mu Alpha music fraternity and Sigma Nu social fraternity.
He was registrar at North Dakota for three years and took graduate work at Columbia Uiversity before coming to USC.

BUSINESS DEANS LIST HONORS 50
(See Column Three)
PAGE THREE
Row Weekend Parties Honor St. Patrick
Universrty cyf Southern Gali'-forrwa
DAI LY W TROJAN
PAGE FOUR
Diamond Men to Play Santa Barbara
V0L- Ll,l LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, FRIDAY, MARCH 16, 1962 NO. 90
Protest Storm Blackens Voting
FILING THROUGH-First day voters cast their votes in the controversial balloting yesterday which resulted in com-
TOMMY'S TAILOR-Roger N. Burnham, 85, who created
Tommy Trojan in 1929-30, died yesterday of natural causes. The noted sculptor also did numerous works for the city including a statue of General MacArthur.
Tommy s Dies at
Father'
85
Age
By SUE BERNARD Burnham on Russell S. Saun-
The father of Tommy Trojan ders, a star back on the USC died vesterday. football team that year.
Roger Noble Burnham, 85.! “Tommy Trojan” was com-the sculptor of the 32-year-old Pleted and dedicated in June, statue of the Trojan warrior, 1930, at a ceremony in which died of natural causes at the ’Dr. McCoy’s daughter Janet, as home of friends. He had been vice president of the student under the care of guardians body and official host of the
Mr. and Mrs. John Pfalzgraff, 1041 W. 21st St., for the past two years.
university, unveiled the Trojan statue. She is now Mrs. Mulvey White, wife of the university’s vice president of student and alumni affairs.
Funeral services have not yet been announced. Final arrangements will be made after the Saunders Posed arri\ al of Mr. Burnham s bro- Saunders, now an assistant ther, Stanton, from Florida at director for Warner Brothers noon today. J Pictures, recalled yesterday for
the Daily Trojan the posing he
Short Illness
Pfalzgraff told the Daily Trojan yesterday that Mr. Burnham had been living in the rear of a house across the street from him. The sculptor became ill Jan. 23 and moved in with the Pfalzgraffs a week later.
“There will probably be some kind of services at the little church Roger’s been attending, the New Jerusalem Church (Sweden-Borgian) at 6th and Virgil,’’ he said.
Mr. Burnham, born in Bingham. Mass., did the Tommy Trojan statue in 1929-30 on the request of the USC Alumni Association.
Trojan Symbol
did when the sculptor was creating Tommy.
“I was asked one day by Bill Hunter, then director of athletics, to meet the man who was going to do the Trojan warrior statue. I was very interested then in athletics and body building, and when I met Burnham he asked me if I’d like to pose for him,” he said.
“It was quite a pleasure for me and I thought he did a beautiful job.”
Three Sessions
Saunders posed for three ses sions of approximately an hour’s length, and the sculptor took numerous photographs and
Dr. Janies D. McCoy, then measurements to keep his image
president of the General Alumni Association, commissioned the bronze figure “to perpetuate the symbol ’Trojan’ in the form of a Trojan Warrior, set up on the campus and so located that it would constitute a rallying point for the student body.”
Dr. McCoy wrote that Mr. Burnham, one of America’s outstanding sculptors, “immediately caught the idealism back of our project and went to work upon the model.”
in mind.
Mr. Burnham, a Los Angeles resident for many years, contributed many other examples of sculpture in the area. He created the figure of General MacArthur that stands in MacArthur Park and the “War and Peace” Spanish-American war memorial for the U.S. Veterans Administration Hopsital in Sawteile.
He also did the Rudolph Valentino memorial, called “Inspiration,” which stood in De-The model was begun in Longpre Park until vandals spring of 1929, based by Mr. broke it off at the base.
Six Students Make 4-Point In Business
Fifty business students were cited on the fall semester Dean's List released yesterday by the School of Business.
To be eligible for the honor, students must carry a minimum of 12 units and must have received a 3.5 or better grade average.
Six students on the list earned a 4.0 average for the semester — Frank Albert Caput, management; Daniel M. Gottlieb, finance; Margaret Ann Folk, marketing; Stephan Bruce Imhoff, accounting; Nancy Zoe Spillman, business education; and Drn Craig Todt, finance.
Notable Increase
“There is a notable increase in the number of lower division students who made the list,"
Dr. William C. Himstreet, assistant business dean, noted.
“This is a step in the right direction for the honors program we are starting in the fall.”
Dr. Himstreet pointed to one student, Harold Valentiner in management, who made the list with a 3.62 while carrying 24 units.
Also included in the honor roll were Phyllis E. Balliett, in- j dustrial relations; Robert Hay-lett Bardin, finance; William M.
Barton, management; Robert Joel Berg, business economics and international trade; William H. Broesamle, management; Kenneth Walter Burgan, accounting; Jerome Hudson Craig, accounting; Dominic Ferrante, management; Barry Carlyle Fink, finance: Norman E. Fist, marketing; and Howard Grant Franklin, finance.
Others Named
Also named were Robert H.
Glogow, accounting; David L.
Gordin, marketing; Lynn Steven Guerra, management; David Alan Hartquist, management;
David A. Hodgkinson, accounting; Richard Karl Hoertig, management; Douglas F. Jenan, management; and Sherwood Kahlenberg, finance.
The list continued with Philip T ^ ,•
Kelmar, accounting; Louis Ar-j | Q V*OnTinUO lene Kirkstone, office administration; Robert William Lees, accounting; Elaine Levey, accounting; Barbara Ann Littlejohn, business education; Paul Thomas Locke, finance; Joseph Edmund Monaly, accounting; and Robert T. Northcote, finance.
Joseph O. Oltmans, finance;
Charles D. Ousley, marketing;
Rune S. Pearson, accounting;
Claudette Perier, business education; Rhoger H. Pugh, finance; Janet M. P^au, office administration; and Marilyn J.
Rossino, business education, were also named.
The list concluded with Harold Scott, management; Grant Kenyon Smith, accounting;
Maris Valkass, marketing;
Richard Edward Wagner, business economics and international trade; William Rogert Watson, finance; Donald Alan Weintraub, management; Waller Charles Wells, accounting; and Douglass J. Wold, food distribution.
Complaints Hit
Broken Rules'
As 1,100 Vote
By DAN SMITH Senate Reporter
A new elections controversy developed at the start of balloting yesterday as several enraged students and groups complained that not all of the more than 1,100 first-day voters were eligible to go through the polls.
Among the protestors were Julie Cummins, Senior Class secretary and one of the
Daily Trojan Photo
plaints by poll workers concerning the ineligibility of some of the 1,100 students who exercised their privileges.
Lope Drama Will Receive U.S. Premiere in Bovard
Lope de Vega’s rarely pro duced drama of love, intrigue and murder, “The Gentleman from Olmedo/' will open a six-run performance tonight at 8:30 in Bovard Auditorium in celebration of the 400th birthday of the renowned Spanish playwright.
The play, being presented by the drama department, will receive two performances tomorrow with a matinee scheduled for 2 p.m. and an evening performance at 8:30. Tickets for all performances, including March 22, 23 and 24, are on sale at the drama office, 3709
Hofstadter To Continu Discussions
Court Posts Will Open
Petitions for two clerks for Womens’ Judicial Court will be available next week in 301a SU,
Chief Justice Hedy Davis announced yesterday.
Applicants should have a 2.5 cumulative grade average and sophomore standing next fall, fall, she said. They should also sign up for an interview time when they pick up and fill out applications.
“Those chosen will proceed to justices and will stay on until graduation. They will sit in on all judicial meetings as voting members and will record and type up statements for official! accommodate
Historian Richard Hofstadter will discuss “Anti-Intellectual-ism in Our Time” tonight at 8 in 229 FH in the second of a five-part series being presented by the Haynes Foundation.
Dr. Hofstadter opened his series on “Anti-Intellectualism in American Life” in front of a capacity crowd Wednesday with a discussion of reasons for the unpopularity of the intellectual in many sectors of the American public.
Second Lecture
He will devote his second lecture to illustrations of the philosophy of the intellect which he discussed Wednesday. The historian will be introduced by Dr. Carl Q. Christol, professor and head of the political science department.
The Columbia University historian earned the Pulitzer Prize in history in 1955 for “The Age of Reform: From Bryan to F.D.R.”
His awards for scholarly writings have included the Beveridge Memorial Prize of the American Historical Association. which he received in 1944 for “Social D a r wi n i s m in American Thought.”
Remaining Lectures
Three remaining campus lectures in the current Haynes Foundation series will be given by Dr. Hofstadter next week. On Monday he will discuss “The Decline of the Gentleman,” while “The Fate of the Reformer” and ‘The Rise of the Expert” will be discussed next Wednesday and Friday respectively.
All lectures, open to the public, will be held in 229 FH at 8 p.m. Loudspeakers have been placed in an adjoining room to overflow from
Hoover St. Admission is S1.50 and students may purchase tickets for 50 cents with activity book coupon 26.
The production will be the first United States performance of the play in the new English translation by Dr. Everett W. Hesse, professor of Spanish, in collaboration with graduate students in a summer Lope seminar.
The flavor of 16th century will be in the music composed for “Gentleman” in 1961 by Harold Owen, teaching assistant in music. The score is based on Spanish ballads of the 15th and 16th centuries for harpsichord, recorder and cello, all popular instruments of the time.
The musicians will appear on stage in authentic Spanish costumes of the period.
Dr. Herbert M. Stahl, professor of drama, will direct the 17-member cast in the three-act performance. Dr. Stahl has staged 25 plays on the USC campus over the past few years. An elaborate set has been designed for the production by John E. Blankenchip, associate professor of drama.
Leading the cast are W. Von Hanwehr as Alonso, Lennard Richmond as Rodrigo, Richard Doetkott as Fernando and Arnold Tamon as Don Pedro.
“The flamboyancy of Lope de Vega’s life and times spills onto the stage in this work,” Bill White, resident stage manager, said. “The play chron-
icles the love of the bullfighter
Don Alonso for the beautiful Ines (portrayed by Allison
Price).”
Blending romance, comedy, and tragedy, the play dramatizes the plight of human beings controlled like puppets by the forces of honor and jealousy, White explained.
“One of the neglected geniuses of the theater, Lope de Vega was amazing in both his literary output and his private life,” White said. “His exploits inspired his contemporary Cervantes to label him a ‘prodigy of nature’.”
'Stagecoach' To Be Run
John Ford’s classic western “Stagecoach’* will be featured tonight at 8 by Delta Kappa Alpha, cinema fraternity, in 133 FH.
The 1939 movie, winner of two Academy Awards, stars John Wayne, Claire Travor and Thomas Mitchell and details the journey of the coach through Apache country. Admission is 50 cents.
Ballots will be available at the showing for the DKA-spon-sored Academy Award predictions contest, for which prizes will be awarded to the persons making the most correct predictions for this year's Academy Awards.
poll workers, and Mike Guhin, president of the Trojans for Representative G o v e r n m ent Party (TRG).
The Board of Inquiry did not meet yesterday to consider the new protests, nor a Daily Trojan protest against the fraudulent insertion of campaign flyers in Wednesday’s paper. No date has been set for a board meeting.
Illegal Voters
Guhin, speaking for TRG, said he knew of three students who had voted illegally yesterday and another who was eligible to vote but whose name did not appear on the master roll of voters. He also claimed students without ID were allowed to vote.
He pointed out that candidates had paid $300 for an accurate list of eligible voters and deplored the inaccuracy of the final list and the disregard being paid it by the Elections Committee.
Dwight Chapin, TRG party chairman, was the voter whose named did not appear on the list of voters, Guhin said.
Foreign Students
Miss Cummins said she noted that several foreign students not officially enrolled in the university had managed to convince the Election Committee they should be permitted to vote.
She explained in a letter to the Daily Trojan that they were “special students,” a description used for students who are not fully enrolled until they complete prerequisite requirements.
Elections Commissioner John Moyer refused to admit or deny that any students had illegally voted.
“In cases where we have been challenged on discrepan cies, we will fully investigate, he said in a 13-word statement.
Wrong Ballots
Other students claimed that poll workers had handed bal lots to them for fields-of-study offices for which they were not entitled to vote.
Moyer, when told that ballots were being distributed to the wrong voters, said he had warned his helpers to double check ballot distributions.
Many students were also seen taking notebooks and other material into the voting booths in violation of election procedures.
Moyer said he tried to correct the situation by having (Continued on Page 2)
Upton Sinclair to Lecture On Man in Uneasy World
files/’ Miss Davis said.
the lecture halL
Upton Sinclair, Pulitzer prize-winning protest writer and flamboyant politician, will speak to USC students next Friday at 11 in Hancock Auditorium.
Sinclair's lecture, “The Individual in a Troubled World,” will be sponsored by the Schocl of Library Science and has been made possible by Paul Baker, general manager of the Pacific library Bindery, Library Dean Martha Boaz said.
The 84-year-old Sinclair, who now lives a quiet life w ith little social activity other than his small group of friends, is the author of novels, plays, biographies and historical interpretations.
His present simple life is a contrast to his former spectacular political career in New
Jersey and California and his | been poor. When conventional
publishers boycotted his work, he issued it himself, nearly always at a financial loss.
There are 772 translations of Sinclair's books in 47 languages and 39 counrties. “World’s
literary crusades for social reform.
Born in Baltimore, he belonged to the unsuccessful branch of an old. wealthy and powerful family. He was a student at
the College of the City of New j End, his 61st novel, was a Lit York at 14 and he worked his erary Guild selection in 1940.
way through CCNY and Columbia University writing hack stories for pulp magazines and jokes for comic periodicals.
He wrote “The Jungle” in 1906 after an investigation of the Chicago stockyards and it was this best seller that made him rich. Sinclair lost all his money in a Utopian cooperative hall which burned down after a year.
Since then he has never been prosperous and has frequently
“Dragon's Teeth” received the Pulitzer prize in 1943.
He ran for various public offices on the Socialist ticket in New Jersey and California, but resigned from the party because of its stand against America’s participation in World War I. Later he returned to the party.
In 1934 he ran for governor of California on the Democratic ticket in a campaign notable for the bitterness of the attacks on him.
Famed Trio Will Present Free Concert
Six members of the faculty of the new Institute for Special Musical Studies — including the world-renowned trio of violinist Jascha Heifetz, cellist Gregor Piatigorsky and violist William Primrose — will perform in Hancock Auditorium next Saturday.
Also on the program of the informal chamber concert for students and faculty will be violinist Eudice Shapiro, violist Sanford Schonbach and pianist Muriel Kerr.
Two hundred free concert tickets wall be available on a first-come, first-served basis at the School of Music, Widney Hall, beginning at 12:15 on Monday, Music Dean Raymond Kendall reported.
No telephone reservations for seats will be accepted.
There will be 150 tickets for students at the information window in the music building. Each student must present an ID card. Due to demand, only one ticket will be given each student.
Fifty faculty tickets will be distributed from room 2 of the same building. Professors must also show their ID cards.
The concert will be sponsored jointly by the School of Music and the Committee on Cultural Events.
The famed music trio began instruction in the music studies institute this semester.
Admissions Receives New Head
Promotion of Howard W. Patmore to the post of director of admissions was announced yesterday by Mulvey White, vice president for student and alumni affairs.
Patmore, who has been with the university for 36 years, was made acting director of admissions a month and a half ago.
He served during the past two years as associate director of admissions, was registrar for 15 years, and assistant registrar 18 years prior to that.
As director of admissions, he will be in charge of handling applications for admission to USC from high school students, transfers from junior colleges and other colleges and universities and students entering graduate divisions.
He is also secretary of the curriculum committee, which approves all courses taught at USC, and secretary of the admissions and student scholarship committees.
A graduate of the University of North Dakota, the new’ director is a member of Phi Beta Kappa and Phi Kappa Phi, national scholarship fraternities. He also belongs to Blue Key, national college men’s honor society, Phi Mu Alpha music fraternity and Sigma Nu social fraternity.
He was registrar at North Dakota for three years and took graduate work at Columbia Uiversity before coming to USC.